Academic literature on the topic 'Murray County'

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Journal articles on the topic "Murray County"

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Cook, Robert B. "Connoisseur's Choices: Stibnite Murray, Mine, Elko County, Nevada." Rocks & Minerals 74, no. 6 (1999): 392–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00357529909605176.

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Mock, Cary J., Anthony J. Amato, Janet Timmerman, and Joseph A. Amato. "Draining the Great Oasis: An Environmental History of Murray County, Minnesota." Environmental History 9, no. 2 (2004): 320. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3986097.

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Casey and Jane Jones. "Specimen Recovery at the Meikle and Murray Mines Elko County, Nevada." Rocks & Minerals 74, no. 6 (1999): 396–404. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00357529909605177.

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Enos Barasa Mukadi, Waruiru Nancy; Ndung’u J. B. Ikenye;. "Effects of Family Financial Management on Marital Stability of Persons in Lanet/Umoja Ward in Nakuru-North Sub-County, Nakuru County." Editon Consortium Journal of Psychology, Guidance, and Counseling 1, no. 3 (2019): 84–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.51317/ecjpgc.v1i3.91.

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This study investigated the effects of Family financial management on marital stability of married persons in Lanet/ Umoja Ward in Nakuru-North Sub-County, Nakuru County. The study used the theories of Functioning Family Systems mainly by Murray Bowen, which focuses on patterns that develop in families in order to defuse anxiety. A target population of 498 married persons was randomly selected featuring those who have been in marriage for ten years or less. A smaller sample of 50 married persons (representing 10%) was randomly extracted. Descriptive statistics were used to describe how the dependent variable related to the independent variables in terms of percentages. The study indicated that management of family finances significantly affected marital stability. This is because some married persons dedicate most of their time in pursuit of wealth and in the process, literally forget their families. They seek to invest for their family at the expense of investing in their families. The study recommends that spouses intending to get married should undertake premarital counseling regarding financial management to guarantee marital stability.
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Maina, Jaccobed W., Zipporah Kaaria, and Gregory Kivanguli. "Effect of Pastor’s Church Ministry on their Family Stability in Nairobi County, Kenya." European Scientific Journal, ESJ 14, no. 29 (2018): 36. http://dx.doi.org/10.19044/esj.2018.v14n29p36.

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The family is an important place for individual mental growth. Pastors’ families, however, experience ministry related challenges with potential ramifications on their family stability. The specific objectives were; To find out the extent to which pastors work as a preacher affects family stability in selected churches in Eastlands – Nairobi County, to establish the extent to which pastoral care work affects family stability, and to determine the extent to which church administration work affects family stability. The research was guided by the Structural Family Theory developed by Salvador Minuchin and Family Systems theory propounded by Murray Bowen. Descriptive survey design was used. The sample of 166 respondents comprised of pastors, pastors’ spouses and adult children. Data were collected using a structured questionnaire and analyzed using descriptive statistical techniques. Hypotheses were tested using Spearman’s rank correlation technique at p<.05. The results showed that the relationship between preaching and family stability was not statistically significant. However, it was found that church administration and pastoral care had a significant negative correlation with family stability. It was recommended that the church needs to find ways of mitigating negative effects of church ministry by professionalizing its human resource systems and engaging professional counsellors for pastors and their families.
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Bernier, Martine, Valérie Fournier, Les Eccles, and Pierre Giovenazzo. "Control of Aethina tumida (Coleoptera: Nitidulidae) using in-hive traps." Canadian Entomologist 147, no. 1 (2014): 97–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.4039/tce.2014.28.

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AbstractThe small hive beetle (SHB), Aethina tumida Murray (Coleoptera: Nitidulidae), is a non-native pest of honey bees (Apis mellifera Linnaeus (Hymenoptera: Apidae)) newly introduced to Canada. The effectiveness of three in-hive traps was tested in springtime in West-Montérégie (southern Québec, Canada) and in late summer in Essex County (southern Ontario, Canada): AJ’s Beetle Eater™ (AJ’s Beetle Eater), Beetle Barn™ (Rossmann Apiaries), and Hood™ trap (Brushy Mountain Bee Farm). Traps were placed in the brood chamber of 12 colonies in West-Montérégie, and in 48 colonies in the top honey super in Essex County. In-hive traps were effective in reducing SHB populations without compromising the bee population or colony weight gain. In West-Montérégie, the Beetle Barn™ was the most effective trap during the first week, when SHB populations were high. It was less effective when honey bees sealed trap openings with propolis. In Essex County, the AJ’s Beetle Eater™ was the most effective throughout the trial. There was no difference in efficacy between the various solutions used in the Hood™ trap (mineral oil versus mineral oil and apple cider vinegar).
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Ghosh, Sayantan, John N. Hooker, Caleb P. Bontempi, and Roger M. Slatt. "High-resolution stratigraphic characterization of natural fracture attributes in the Woodford Shale, Arbuckle Wilderness and US-77D Outcrops, Murray County, Oklahoma." Interpretation 6, no. 1 (2018): SC29—SC41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/int-2017-0056.1.

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Natural fracture aperture-size, spacing, and stratigraphic variation in fracture density are factors determining the fluid-flow capacity of low-permeability formations. In this study, several facies were identified in a Woodford Shale complete section. The section was divided into four broad stratigraphic zones based on interbedding of similar facies. Average thicknesses and percentages of brittle and ductile beds in each stratigraphic foot were recorded. Also, five fracture sets were identified. These sets were split into two groups based on their trace exposures. Fracture linear intensity (number of fractures normalized to the scanline length [[Formula: see text]]) values were quantified for brittle and ductile beds. Individual fracture intensity-bed thickness linear equations were derived. These equations, along with the average bed thickness and percentage of brittle and ductile lithologies in each stratigraphic foot, were used to construct a fracture areal density (number of fracture traces normalized to the trace exposure area [[Formula: see text]]) profile. Finally, the fracture opening-displacement size variations, clustering tendencies, and fracture saturation were quantified. Fracture intensity-bed thickness equations predict approximately 1.5–3 times more fractures in the brittle beds compared with ductile beds at any given bed thickness. Parts of zone 2 and almost entire zone 3, located in the upper and middle Woodford, respectively, have high fracture densities and are situated within relatively organic-rich (high-GR) intervals. These intervals may be suitable horizontal well landing targets. All observed fracture cement exhibit a lack of crack-seal texture. Characteristic aperture-size distributions exist, with most apertures in the 0.05–1 mm (0.00016–0.0032 ft) range. In the chert beds, fracture cement is primarily bitumen or silica or both. Fractures in dolomite beds primarily have calcite cement. The average fracture spacing indices (i.e., bed thickness-fracture spacing ratio) in brittle and ductile beds were determined to be 2 and 1.2, respectively. Uniform fracture spacing was observed along all scanlines in the studied beds.
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Murray, Aife. "The Ku Klux Klan at Home in Hillsdale." New Jersey Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 3, no. 2 (2017): 177. http://dx.doi.org/10.14713/njs.v3i2.87.

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In “The Ku Klux Klan at Home in Hillsdale,” author Aífe Murray travels to Bergen County to reckon with a dramatic set of events that occurred during her father’s Hillsdale youth when his family was attacked by the Second Ku Klux Klan; long-held by historians as this country’s most powerful far right movement. Through the author’s quest (including interviews with her father’s contemporaries on both sides of the Klan equation), she uncovers a Klan story that, in artifacts and acts, has been preserved within a larger, more common frame of America’s failure to come to terms with what occurred in the early 20th century. Within the long shadow of all-American terrorism, a tale is revealed of shifting power in the Pascack Valley with a local KKK populated by community leaders fearing changes that included Catholic encroachment. After the Klan’s demise, some victims, refusing to forget, kept the story alive while living beside their former terrorizers. The author notes that a mass movement of millions of otherwise ordinary white Protestants should be remembered not only for its legacy of terror (with which Americans continue to wrestle) but for how their fires forged an unintended consequence: subsequent storytellers, historians, and resistors like her father who made a life of civil rights activism.
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Schmale, D. G., A. K. Wood-Jones, M. A. Hansen, E. L. Stromberg, and C. W. Roane. "First Report of Cephalosporium gramineum, Causal Agent of Cephalosporium Stripe of Wheat, in a Commercial Winter Wheat Field in Virginia." Plant Disease 91, no. 3 (2007): 329. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis-91-3-0329c.

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Cephalosporium stripe (CS) (2) was identified in a commercial field of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum) near Riner, Montgomery County, Virginia in May 2006. Nearly 15% of the field was severely affected. Broad, yellow-brown stripes were observed on the leaf blades of affected plants, and many plants were stunted and had ripened prematurely. Symptomatic plants were associated with low acidic (pH 5.2), wet spots of the field. Leaves and nodes of affected plants were surface disinfested for 1 min in 5% sodium hypochlorite, plated on corn meal agar (CMA), and incubated at 20°C for 5 days. Cephalosporium gramineum was isolated from numerous plants. Cultures of the fungus produced hyaline conidiophores approximately 5 μm long and unicellular conidia 3 to 7 μm long. Aqueous suspensions of mycelia and conidia were prepared from pure cultures. Several spring wheat cultivars were wounded by severing the root mass and were inoculated when the fifth stem node was detectable (35 on Zadoks scale). Noninoculated plants were wounded as controls. Plants were kept in the greenhouse at temperatures of 22 to 27°C. After 14 days, inoculated plants produced symptoms of CS, and the fungus was reisolated from the leaves of these plants. No symptoms were observed on noninoculated control plants. Though CS had been observed in Virginia in research nurseries (1), to our knowledge, this is the first confirmed report of the disease in a commercial wheat field in Virginia. References: (1) J. B. Jones et al. Plant Dis. 64:325, 1980. (2) C. M. Stiles and T. D. Murray. Phytopathology 86:177, 1996.
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Southwell, Colin J., and Louise M. Emmerson. "New counts of Adélie penguin populations at Scullin and Murray monoliths, Mac. Robertson Land, East Antarctica." Antarctic Science 25, no. 3 (2012): 381–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s095410201200106x.

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AbstractScullin and Murray monoliths are thought to hold the largest concentration of breeding seabirds in East Antarctica. The monoliths were designated as an Antarctic Specially Protected Area (ASPA No. 164) in 2005 in recognition of the global importance of the seabird assemblages and to protect their outstanding ecological and scientific values. The management plan for the Scullin and Murray Monoliths ASPA encourages regular seabird population monitoring using methods such as aerial photography, but the complex logistics of accessing this remote site has until now limited quantitative assessment of the seabird populations to a single survey in 1986/87. In December 2010 we photographed the Adélie penguin population to provide the population counts presented here. We discuss the potential biases and uncertainties in estimating the breeding population from both the recent and 1980s population count data.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Murray County"

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Gibson, Layton Scott 1956. "Geology and genesis of gold-bearing quartz veins on Ophir Mountain, near Murray, Shoshone County, Idaho." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 1986. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/558056.

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Perry, Heather A. "The Life History and Contributions to the Ecology of Camelobaetidius variabilis Wiersema 1998 (Ephemeroptera: Baetidae) in Honey Creek, Oklahoma." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2005. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc4944/.

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A study of the life history and ecology of Camelobaetidius variabilis was conducted in Honey Creek, OK from February 2003-April 2004. Nymph development was assessed using changes in external morphology. Laboratory reared nymphs were used to calculate number of degree days to complete development (772 degree days at 20.8° C ±.38° C), which was used to determine voltinism. Field collected nymph microhabitat distribution was used in assessing microhabitat distribution. Nymphal thermoregulation was assessed during the winter and spring by comparing nymphal numbers present in shaded and un-shaded habitats. Camelobaetidius variabilis nymphs showed preference for algal microhabitats during the spring and leaf packs in the winter. Nymphs inhabited leaf packs to increase metabolic rate during the winter. Increased temperatures aid in development of nymphs. Camelobaetidius variabilis exhibited a multivoltine life cycle with six overlapping generations.
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Wang, Yi-Kuang. "Life History of Mayatrichia ponta Ross (Trichoptera: Hydroptilidae) in Honey Creek, Turner Falls Park, Oklahoma." Thesis, University of North Texas, 1997. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc278261/.

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The life history and ontogenetic microhabitat change of Mayatrichia ponta Ross were investigated in Honey Creek, Turner Falls Park, Murray Co., Oklahoma, U.S.A. from August 1994 to August 1995. The shape of larval cases changed from a small cone to a cylinder. M. ponta had an asynchronous multivoltine life history with considerable cohort and generation overlap; five generations were estimated. The development rate was reduced in winter. The winter generations of M. ponta had wider head capsule widths (136-165 μm) than summer generations (121-145 μm). The sex ratio of adults was 1.43 ♂ : 1 ♀. Fecundity ranged from 46 to 150 eggs/female. Fifth instar larvae and pupae aggregated on the bottom side of substrates. Early instars were distributed evenly on all sides of substrates. General patterns of ontogenetic microhabitat shift in aquatic insects are categorized as flow mediated, flow independent, and population interactions and other resources mediated.
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Rouliere, Camille. "Visions of Waters in Lower Murray Country." Thesis, Normandie, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018NORMC014/document.

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L’eau a creusé son chemin jusqu’au cœur des discussions sur le développement durable. Les discours autour de la gestion des eaux soulignent à la fois son abondance dévastatrice et son absence critique : la montée des eaux se juxtapose à la désertification ; les tornades et les inondations répondent à des périodes de sécheresse prolongées. Alors que nous polluons, canalisons et dessalinisons à un rythme toujours croissant, la nature ambiguë de notre relation avec l’eau devient visible. Pendant que nous continuons d’endommager ce qui, par-dessus tout, rend la vie possible, la précarité augmente pour l’ensemble de la population. Il n’est donc pas étonnant qu’un changement de paradigme dans notre compréhension des eaux, devant engendrer une modification dans leur utilisation, soit présenté comme l’un des plus grands et plus pressants défis de notre époque. Ma recherche répond à ce défi. Elle porte sur la poétique de l’espace, c’est-à-dire sur l’étude de la manière dont les êtres humains vivent et interagissent avec leur environnement à travers les arts. Plus précisément, j’explore les relations entre les humains, les eaux et les sons (à la fois propres et générés par les humains) dans la Lower Murray Country (Australie Méridionale). Mon but est de révéler et théoriser ces relations qui évoluent en parallèle afin d’élaborer une cartographie mettant à jour toute une gamme de manières de percevoir et de comprendre ces eaux, et d’être ensuite à même d’utiliser cette pluralité pour remettre en question—et potentiellement imaginer à nouveau—leur construction et représentation culturelles. Afin d’atteindre ce but, j’érige “les eaux” en leitmotiv qui me permet d’unifier ma recherche et me déplacer entre des espaces physiques et théoriques pour mettre en dialogue les individus et leur environnement, tant au niveau local que général. En particulier, je me sers du mouvement des eaux que forment le courant et la résonance pour opérer cette synthèse, mouvement que j’associe à la rythmanalyse et la réverbération (d’après les philosophes Henri Lefebvre et Fran Dyson, respectivement). Je me suis également inspirée du travail du philosophe et poète Édouard Glissant. En particulier, son concept de Relation est une clef pour me permettre de traduire textuellement ces mouvements des eaux. J’applique cette méthodologie aqueuse à presque deux siècles de production musicale—allant des pratiques ngarrindjeri et des ballades coloniales à la musique classique contemporaine et l’art sonore ; et presque deux siècles de modifications touchant au “caractère sonore” des eaux de la Lower Murray Country—matérialisée à travers la déforestation défigurante, la retenue des eaux, l’irrigation mais aussi la salinité croissante des eaux comme des sols. Ainsi, cette thèse se construit selon le principe d’accumulation d’exemples prôné par Glissant (Poetics of Relation 172-4). Elle est structurée autour de quatre sections—quatre visions punctiformes des eaux écrites comme un prélude à une potentielle infinité d’autres. Furtives, partielles, orientées et fragmentées, ces visions procèdent de périodes particulièrement significatives : de périodes pouvant subir des changements, de périodes charnières où des altérations radicales peuvent poindre ou apparaître effectivement
Waters are contested entities that are currently at the centre of most scientific discussions about sustainability. Discourse around water management underlines both the serious absence and devastating overabundance of water: rising sea levels compete against desertification; hurricanes and floods follow periods of prolonged drought. As we increasingly pollute, canalise and desalinate waters, the ambiguous nature of our relationship with these entities becomes visible. And, while we continue to damage what most sustains us, collective precarity grows. It is therefore unsurprising that shifting our understanding, and subsequent use, of water has been described as one of the biggest—and most pressing—challenges of our time.My research answers to this challenge. It centres on spatial poetics, that is, on the manner in which people engage and interact with their environment through art. More precisely, I explore the relationships between humans, waters and sound—both intrinsic and human-produced—in Lower Murray Country (South Australia). My aim is to unveil, theorise and create maps of these co-evolving relationships to reveal an array of manners to perceive and relate to these waters; and then draw on this plurality to question—and potentially reimagine—their cultural construction and representation. In order to do so, I transform waters into a leitmotif which enables me to weave my investigation together and move in-between theoretical and physical spaces to bring people and their environments into dialogue, both at the local and global levels. In particular, I draw on the watery movements of flow and resonance to operate this weaving, and associate these with rhythmanalysis and resounding (after philosophers Henri Lefebvre and Fran Dyson, respectively). I am also inspired by the work of philosopher and poet Édouard Glissant and use his concept of Relation as a key to enable me to translate these watery movements textually.I apply this aqueous theoretical frame to nearly two centuries of sonic production—ranging from Ngarrindjeri performance and colonial ballads through to contemporary classical music and sound art; and to nearly two centuries of evolution in the sonic character of Lower Murray Country’s waters—ranging from disfiguring deforestation and damming through to rising salinity and irrigation. As such, this thesis is built on the “accumulation of examples” advocated by Glissant (Poetics of Relation 172-4). It is structured around four sections—four punctiform visions of waters written as a prelude to a potential infinity of others. Furtive, partial, oriented and fragmented, these visions denote times of particular significance: times open to challenge; times of hinges and articulations where radical alteration (can) occur
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Monreal, Rogelio. "Lithofacies, depositional environments, and diagenesis of the Mural limestone (Lower Cretaceous), lee siding area, Cochise County, Arizona." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/558029.

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Cordalis, Daniel. "Hydrologic characterization of the Mary Murphy Mine and vicinity, Chaffe County, Colorado using multiple isotope tracers and dissolved solutes." Connect to online resource, 2007. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:1442944.

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Crawford, David Brian. "Counter-revolution in Virginia : patriot response to Dunmore's emancipation proclamation of November 7, 1775." Virtual Press, 1993. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/864903.

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In mid-November, 1775, Lord Dunmore last Royal Governor of Virginia attempted to enlist the support of rebel owned slaves to crush Patriot resistance to Great Britain. This study examines the slaveholders' response to Dunmore's actions. Virginia's slaveholders fought a counter-revolution in order to maintain traditional race relations in the colony. Patriot propaganda portrayed Dunmore as a race traitor, who became symbolically more "black" than white. Slaveholders characterized Dunmore as a rebel, a madman, and a sexual deviant - stereotypes normally given to slaves by their "masters." Since Dunmore threatened to destroy the defining institution of slavery, planters sought to salvage their identities by defending the paternalistic philosophy and racist assumptions upon which slave society was based. Planters overwhelmingly became Patriots to protect slavery.
Department of History
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Ligairi, Rachel Mae. "The Familiar Foreign Country: Reading Mexico in Cormac McCarthy, Jack Kerouac, and Katherine Anne Porter." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2006. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/935.

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My thesis examines the discourse of Mexico in the works of three twentieth-century American authors-Cormac McCarthy, Jack Kerouac, and Katherine Anne Porter-in order to analyze representations of Otherness in modernism and postmodernism. I seek to destabilize the dividing line between these periods as well as to show how representation in postmodernity has become more problematic due in large part to the proliferation of consumer culture. Though the Mexico that McCarthy employs in Blood Meridian and the Border Trilogy (All the Pretty Horses, The Crossing, and Cities of the Plain) escapes many stereotypes, his Mexico is merely a staging ground that he uses to examine postmodern questions of philosophy while deconstructing myths such as the Old West and Manifest Destiny and reflecting on the ramifications of World War II. Therefore, McCarthy elides Mexico by using its Otherness as a mirror that enables reflection on the Self. Kerouac too is interested in using Mexico to solve U.S. problems. In On the Road, Kerouac's fictional counterpart, Sal Paradise, searches for the authenticity missing from middle-class American life by ultimately turning to the "authentic" Mexico. Though he is able to distinguish between simulations and reality in his own cultural context, once south of the border Sal misrecognizes what is a hypperreal Mexico for supreme authenticity. By contrast, when Katherine Anne Porter crosses the border, she is quick to identify corruption and revolutionary failure in Mexico. When pieces such as "Xochimilco" and "María Concepción" are placed alongside that of the work of Diego Rivera, a leader in the Mexican muralist movement, it becomes clear that Porter essentializes her Mexican subjects with the specific political goal in mind of furthering the revolution. Additionally, by crossing the generic lines separating fiction and non-fiction, Porter approximates what could be called a postmodern form of ethnography. Yet all of her representational strategies are tempered, especially in her last Mexican story, Hacienda, by an awareness that representations of Other cannot be other than flawed.
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Bolzenius, Sandra M. "The 1945 Black Wac Strike at Ft. Devens." The Ohio State University, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1385398294.

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Maunder, Paul Allan. "The Rebellious Mirror,Before and after 1984:Community-based theatre in Aotearoa." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Theatre and Film Studies, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/5381.

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In this thesis I outline the contribution Community-based theatre has made to New Zealand theatre. This involves a defining of theatre production as a material practice. Community-based theatre was a tendency from the 1930s, a promise of the left theatre movement and, I argue, was being searched for as a form of practice by the avant-garde, experimental practitioners of the 1970s. At the same time, early Māori theatre began as a Community-based practice before moving into the mainstream. With the arrival of neo-liberalism to Aotearoa in 1984, community groups and Community-based theatre could become official providers within the political system. This led to a flowering of practices, which I describe, together with the tensions that arise from being a part of that system. However, neo-liberalism introduced managerial practices into state contracting and patronage policy, which effectively denied this flowering the sustenance deserved. At the same time, these policies commodified mainstream theatre production. In conclusion, I argue that in the current situation of global crisis, Community-based theatre practice has a continuing role to play in giving voice to the multitude and by being a practice of the Common.
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Books on the topic "Murray County"

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Debbie, Sharp. Rural life in Murray County. Arcadia Publishing, 2015.

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Hansen, David J. Murray County's war: The battle for the Murray County seat. Daylight Publishers, 2007.

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Nelson, Gary D. Soil survey of Murray County, Minnesota. National Cooperative Soil Survey, 1990.

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Watterson, Anderson. Soil survey of Murray County, Oklahoma. The Service, 1985.

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Cogburn, Emily. Murray County school days: Moravian to modern. WH Wolfe Associates, 1991.

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Coker, Louise. Murray County, Georgia marriage records, Books I-VI, 1835-1905. The Society, 1998.

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Hanson, Ronald L. Hydrogeology of the Chickasaw National Recreation Area, Murray County, Oklahoma. U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1994.

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Osborn, Alan J. Archeological survey within the Chickasaw National Recreation Area, Murray County, Oklahoma. U.S. Dept. of the Interior, National Park Service, Midwest Archeological Center, 2008.

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O'Connor, Bruce J. Ceramic and structural clays, shales, and slates of Murray County, Georgia. Georgia Dept. of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division, Georgia Geologic Survey, 1986.

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Timmerman, Janet. Draining the Great Oasis: Claiming new agricultural land in Murray County, 1910-1915. Rural Studies, 1993.

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Book chapters on the topic "Murray County"

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Roulière, Camille. "Murray River Country." In Perma/Culture. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781138400429-5.

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Roulière, Camille. "Murray River Country." In Perma/Culture. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315269238-5.

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Masschelein, Anneleen. "Introduction: Literary Advice from Quill to Keyboard." In New Directions in Book History. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-53614-5_1.

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AbstractThis chapter presents a brief history of the dominant, Anglo-American literary advice tradition from the nineteenth century to the present as well as a state of the art of the existing scholarship on literary advice. We focus on several key moments for literary advice in the USA and in the UK: Edgar Allan Poe’s “Philosophy of Composition” (1846), the debate between Sir Walter Besant and Henry James surrounding “The Art of Fiction” (1884), the era of the handbook (1880s–1930s), the “program era” (McGurl 2009) and postwar literary advice, the rise of the “advice author” in the 1980s and 1990s, and finally advice in the “digital literary sphere” (Murray 2018). The overview captures both the remarkable consistency and the transformations of advice, against the background of changes in the literary system, the rise of creative writing, changes in the publishing world, and the rise of the Internet and self-publishing. It highlights the role of some specific actors in the literary advice industry, such as moguls, women, and gurus, and draws attention to a number of subgenres (genre handbooks, self-help literary advice, and the writing memoir), as well as to counter-reactions and resistance to advice in literary works and in avant-garde manuals. Advice is regarded both in the context of the professionalization of authorship in a literary culture shaped by cultural and creative industries, and of the exponential increase of amateur creativity.
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"5. Center of Echoes: Castle Murray, Fauquier County, Virginia." In Acting in the Night. University of California Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520947443-006.

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Saxby, Troy R. "For All My Bravado, Deeply Engrained Notions of Respectability Filled Me with Distress, 1926–1940." In Pauli Murray. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469654928.003.0002.

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This chapter examines Pauli Murray’s early adult years. Murray relocated to New York City to complete high school and undergraduate study at Hunter College. The Great Depression severely disrupted her education, but also facilitated her tramping across the country, often passing as a teenage boy. Gender identity concerns and the social stigma around homosexuality led Murray to seek gender reassignment and contributed to mental health problems, which were also exacerbated by a fear of hereditary insanity. Work on New Deal projects led to immersion in the labor movement and an interest in communism. These influences, and Gandhian civil disobedience, inspired Murray’s groundbreaking contributions to nonviolent direct-action civil rights protests, which included challenging segregated education by applying to the University of North Carolina and being arrested for violating segregated bus seating.
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"Murray, J., concurring." In What Obergefell v. Hodges Should Have Said, edited by Jack M. Balkin. Yale University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300221558.003.0010.

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Today, a majority of the Court strikes down laws banning the performance and recognition of same-sex marriages on the ground that such laws constitute caste or class legislation in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. In so doing, the Court reiterates that the right to marry is a fundamental right and denominates sexual orientation a quasi-suspect classification subject to heightened scrutiny....
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Macintosh, Fiona. "From the Court to the National: The Theatrical Legacy of Gilbert Murray's Bacchae *." In Gilbert Murray Reassessed. Oxford University Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199208791.003.0009.

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"4. Mural Production." In The Heavenly Court. BRILL, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004184909.i-470.19.

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Glover, Richard. "5. Proof without evidence." In Murphy on Evidence. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198788737.003.0005.

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This chapter examines cases in which a court will, or may, find facts in issue or relevant facts established without requiring proof by means of evidence. Specifically, it considers cases in which: (a) facts are formally admitted for the purpose of the proceedings, i.e. are taken to be proved without the need for evidence; (b) notorious or readily demonstrable facts are noticed judicially by the court, i.e. are facts of which the court will acknowledge the truth without the necessity for proof; and (c) facts are presumed in favour of the party asserting them, i.e. where a party proves one fact (the primary fact) and a second fact (the presumed fact) will also be taken to have been proved, in the absence of evidence to the contrary.
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Glover, Richard. "3. The judicial function in the law of evidence." In Murphy on Evidence. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198788737.003.0003.

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This chapter discusses the different functions in a court and how the court is composed of a tribunal of law and a tribunal of fact. In a jury trial, the judge decides matters of law and is the tribunal of law, while the jury is the ‘fact-finder’, the tribunal of fact. In a non-jury trial, the judge or magistrates perform both functions. This chapter discusses the functions of the judge in legal issues concerning evidence and, in particular, when a case is withdrawn from the jury because there is ‘no case’; judicial discretion; and admissibility of evidence illegally or unfairly obtained.
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Conference papers on the topic "Murray County"

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Tréanton, Jessica A. "OUTCROP DERIVED INORGANIC GEOCHEMISTRY OF THE WOODFORD SHALE; MURRAY COUNTY; OKLAHOMA." In GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, USA - 2016. Geological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2016am-284149.

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McLachlin, B. Rex. "THE MURRAY GOLD DISTRICT, SHOSHONE COUNTY, IDAHO: A POSSIBLE REDUCED INTRUSION-RELATED GOLD SYSTEM." In 68th Annual Rocky Mountain GSA Section Meeting. Geological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2016rm-276190.

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Carpiceci, Marco, and Fabio Colonnese. "Le mura di Leonardo. I rilievi del 1502." In FORTMED2020 - Defensive Architecture of the Mediterranean. Universitat Politàcnica de València, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/fortmed2020.2020.11363.

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Leonardo’s Walls. Surveys in 1502In the summer of 1502, Cesare Borgia appointed Leonardo da Vinci for his engineering expertise. His assignment was specific and concerning with military architecture: he was expected to “see, measure and do good estimation”. The Codex L, a small notebook conserved in the Library of the Institute of France, show the results of the survey of the city walls of Cesena and Urbino. The technique Leonardo adopted consists in traversing rectilinear stretches, measuring their length by means of an instrument able to count his steps and establishing their orientation by means of a compass. At the end of the path, the data relative to the sides of a closed polygon are obtained, resulting the geometric plan of the walls. This practice is testified by some residual eidotypes provided with quotas and orientations. In some cases, only the lists of distances in numbers are present, but the analysis of the figures makes it possible to reconstruct the surveyed plans, as Nando De Toni pioneered many years ago. This study focuses on the tools and the urban survey technique used by Leonardo. The analysis of some sheets from the Codex L, contextualized with respect to the actual topography of the sites, allows to understand the correct sequence of the operations carried out first in the site and then at the drawing board. By means of specific digital reconstructions, it is therefore possible to study the instrumental and operational limits of this practice and, by comparing it with the current state, to reconstruct the entire defensive structure.
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Norden, C., H. Heine, F. Misselwitz, H.-J. Herrmann, E. Engler, and G. Martin. "PLATELET AND VESSEL WALL REACTIVITY IN HYPERTENSIVE AND N0RM0TENSIVE RHESUS MONKEYS." In XIth International Congress on Thrombosis and Haemostasis. Schattauer GmbH, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0038-1644497.

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Hypertension is an important risk factor in the pathogenesis of arteriosclerosis and its thrombotic complications. Therefore, we investigated platelet and vessel wall reactivity in 7 subhuman primates (7.0 Macaca mulatta). Five monkeys received a psychosocial stress over a long-term period, three developed a stress-induced hypertension. Two unstressed normotensive monkeys served as e control. Platelet turnover in vivo, synthesis of platelet prostanoids, and various platelet function tests in vitro were determined. Vessel wall reactivity was assessed histo-pathologically and by means of H-thymidin-incorpora-tion into vessel segments in vitro. In the hypertensive rhesus monkeys an accelerated platelet turnover, accompanied with a decreased platelet count, and a markedly increased plasma-TXB2-level were found. ADP-induced platelet aggregation was slightly enhanced. Additionally, platelet adhesion to collagen-coated surfaces was investigated. We found the platelet attachment, spreading, and the formation of platelet mural thrombi to be significantly enhanced in the hypertensive animals. Histopathological examination of large arteries revealed signs of an increased intra-vital vasocontraction as well as enlargement of the relative vessel wall cross-section area in the hypertensive rhesus monkeys. Autoradiographical determination of the thymidine-incorporation in vitro allows investigation of cell proliferation in the intima and media of vessels. We found hypertension-related alterations of the media not only in large, but also in small vessels. Additionally, primary cultures of aortic endothelial cells were established and concentration of endothelial cell-specific metabolites was measured in the conditioned media. Our results confirm the existence of hypertension-related changes in platelet and vessel wall reactivity.
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Reports on the topic "Murray County"

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Fields, Elizabeth A., and Steven D. Smith. John Martin's Home?. Historical and Archaeological Investigations of Site 9Mu56, Murray County, Georgia. Defense Technical Information Center, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada296622.

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Bhatt, Mihir R., Shilpi Srivastava, Megan Schmidt-Sane, and Lyla Mehta. Key Considerations: India's Deadly Second COVID-19 Wave: Addressing Impacts and Building Preparedness Against Future Waves. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/sshap.2021.031.

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Since February 2021, countless lives have been lost in India, which has compounded the social and economic devastation caused by the second wave of COVID-19. The sharp surge in cases across the country overwhelmed the health infrastructure, with people left scrambling for hospital beds, critical drugs, and oxygen. As of May 2021, infections began to come down in urban areas. However, the effects of the second wave continued to be felt in rural areas. This is the worst humanitarian and public health crisis the country has witnessed since independence; while the continued spread of COVID-19 variants will have regional and global implications. With a slow vaccine rollout and overwhelmed health infrastructure, there is a critical need to examine India's response and recommend measures to further arrest the current spread of infection and to prevent and prepare against future waves. This brief is a rapid social science review and analysis of the second wave of COVID-19 in India. It draws on emerging reports, literature, and regional social science expertise to examine reasons for the second wave, explain its impact, and highlight the systemic issues that hindered the response. This brief puts forth vital considerations for local and national government, civil society, and humanitarian actors at global and national levels, with implications for future waves of COVID-19 in low- and middle-income countries. This review is part of the Social Science in Humanitarian Action Platform (SSHAP) series on the COVID-19 response in India. It was developed for SSHAP by Mihir R. Bhatt (AIDMI), Shilpi Srivastava (IDS), Megan Schmidt-Sane (IDS), and Lyla Mehta (IDS) with input and reviews from Deepak Sanan (Former Civil Servant; Senior Visiting Fellow, Centre for Policy Research), Subir Sinha (SOAS), Murad Banaji (Middlesex University London), Delhi Rose Angom (Oxfam India), Olivia Tulloch (Anthrologica) and Santiago Ripoll (IDS). It is the responsibility of SSHAP.
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Hydrogeology of the Chickasaw National Recreation Area, Murray County, Oklahoma. US Geological Survey, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/wri944102.

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Hydrology and water quality near Bromide Pavilion in Chickasaw National Recreation Area, Murray County, Oklahoma, 2000. US Geological Survey, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/wri20014250.

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